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brought her Women of the Otherworld books from England.They lugged books. Omens.13. The original Bitten.They came for One Necromantic Evening in the little village where a TV series on Armstrong's first female werewolf book Bitten was shot. That made it special.Somehow Hespeler has become a character in Armstrong's surreal world of wonder.And the readers, mostly women, lined up for as long as two hours to meet her on a Thursday the 12th in September."This is the land of Bitten," bookshop owner Wendy Hood Morris said.So they waited outside for the Sudbury born siren of their darkest dreams to pull up in her Mercedes and settle into a tall stool in the hall above this mom and pop paper book and vinyl record store.The line stretched down the Queen Street block to the front of the Kentucky Fried Chicken. It passed the empty pole where the Colonel's giant bucket would have rotated, had it now blown down in the Storm of the Century one Black Christmas.The locals came too. They marvelled at the length of the line. In Hespeler? Ridiculous.Susan Delve, 30, never thought she'd see such a literal literary lineup here."Oh, good god, no," said Delve, accompanied by two teenage fans from Hespeler."Nothing exciting normally happens here."But this was not a normal night. Armstrong read from her book. She answered questions. She spoke of how the movies she sees in her head spill out onto the empty pages before her. Her male characters are strong, too. That makes the sturdiness of her female heroes and villains all the more stark and inspiring.They came to be inspired and treated like their wildest, weirdest dreams